EVENING EDITION z, , EVENING EDITION Calling cards, wed ding stat'onery, om merclal stationery and Job printing to order at the East Oregonlan. VOUNTTJJFFICIAL PAPER. Vp5 S 'o CTy 0FFICIAL PAPER. VOL.24 PENDLETON, OREGON, IRIDAY, .ii'XK lull. NO. 7247 1 tImphi procession cheered i i m um mu Tn IT ENTHUSIASTIC MULTITUDE! ROYAL PAHADE IS GORGEOUS Toda's Ceremonies in Coro nation Program are of Mil itary Magnificence threatening raix C'Al'SKS S.MALLEIl CKOW1) Stnil Owners Selling Scats for Wliut They Can Get anil Many Arc Un I'lllcd King mid Queen Are En tertained at Luncheon by Iiord Major of London, i London,' June 23. To thundering cheers of the multitude, George V. and Queen Mary today made royal progress through the streets of the centrril and southern portion of the city. This was their f rst appear ance Mince the crowning. Later they were entertained at a big luncheon by the lord mayor of London. The procession was a mile long and In cluded detachments from every Eng lish regiment of the navy. Royal Salute Fired. As the procession left Buckingham Palace the Royal Horse artillery at St. James Park fired the royal sa lute. The royal couple were accom panied by the Prince of Wales. From a military standpoint the progress was magnificent but not as much en thusiasm whs aroused as could be ex pected. The lowering skies and threatening rain caused the throng to be smaller than .anticipated and the stand owners were selling seats for what they could get and stands In some parts were not filled. The streets and sidewalks were crowded. Strenuous Week for King. London, June 23. Today's cere monies In the coronation program are only a little les important than those of yesterday, for they consist of the triumphal procession through the streets of London, after the corona tion. For the next week King George and Queen Mary will have a strenu . ous time. The overseas premlera dnd other overseas dlgnatlrics, with their wives and friends were entertained at Portsmouth town hall . today and the men of tho British and foreign fleets will be given a garden party at Victoria park this evening. Tomor row King George will review the home and foreign fleets, when the United States battleship Delaware i will take the laurel for Its size and equipment. Sunday there will be special ser vices In all of the churches. Monday there w',11 bo the admiralty ball and a gala performance at the opera; Tuesday Georeo and Mary will give a garden party at Buckingham palace which will be attended by distinguish ed visitors from abroad; Wednesday there is planned n royal visit to the agicultural show at Norwich; Thurs day the king and queen will visit the Guildhall; Friday King George will fdw u fete to lOO.ODO children of the empire mid In the evening, with Quei ii Mary, (lfno with Premier and Mrs. .si;u!th, whi'e Saturday will see n beginning of the end of the coro na:, .n i stivlties by t'ne removal of the court to Windsor Castle. Americans visiting Berlin this sum mer are flocking to tho recently op ened restaurant in the Zoological Garden which is tho greatest eating house In the world. Ten thousand s penyile can dine at the same time be neath its roof, while the open air ter races designed for use at this season accommodate another 10,000. There aro 1000 waiters and a kitchen staff of 500. Airmen havo no patron saint, yet It Is' proposed In France that Ascension Day should bo chosen as their fete patronale. It sounds like a joke to make tho cholco by virtue of a pun, but It Is really quite in accordance with medieval precedents. Already masons and bricklayers count Ascen sion day as their fete patronale for -precisely the same reason. In order to build houses they ascend ladders. What is perhaps more curious is that miners and quarrymen also claim it as their own. Generally of course a saint's story or earthly vocation has made him patron of a particular trade or class. St. Joseph Is naturally tho patron of carpenters. St. Ives, a lawyer, that of lawyers. On this prin ciple, Elijah, who ascended In a fiery chariot, would seem the natural pat ron of airmen. The eternal servant problem Beems to bo nearing a solution In Berlin, and It Is a very simple , one, namely the substitution of men for women. Of recent years a vast Increase in the Im migration from tho country to the city has taken place, with the result that a, capable man servant can now bo hired for between $8 and $10 a month with board. The new servant is suid to be, infinitely superior to thi; old, besides lending a social glory to the household, as hitherto men servants have been employed almost solely by noble and aristocratic or very wealthy families. Experience shows that they can do as well or better than the women. Fashions aro more revolutionary this year than they have been for many seasons. The really small hat Is now an accomplished fact, women are heeoming aeoustomcd to the wid ened shirt and the crinoline sleeve Is accepted as a pretty novelty; but the new hairdress ng is considered the last straw. It Is being shown by fashionable London hair dressers, but as yet few women have ventured to wear it in public. The hair Is drawn straight back from the forehead and sides and finished in little flat coll at the back. All such frivolties as curls puffs or even waves are banished, the hair being drawn quite smooth and flat. It has a very curious efect after the full coiffures, and It is not In the least likely that It will become popular, as few women possess the beautiful furVhead and features It re quires. Ulna; and Queen in Ho.uil Progress. London. June 23. "All the King's horses and all the King's men," to say nothing of the King himself and 1.1s queen, passed In procession today be fore the most tremendous crowd ever assembled in London. The "royal progress" was one continuous ovation and must have made King George believe, for a moment, that he was really the master, and not the subject, of those who cheered him so lustly. . The route of the brilllan procession was through, the West End, the City of London and South London. At bast half a million people occupied seats in stands for which they had paid from $15 to $75 each. Millions of others lined the streets, the house tops and every nvallabfe point of van tage. Seats In windows along the line (Continued on page five.) HAVEMEYER WANTED 10 MAKE SMITH OFFICIAL CITI.Ell TALKS IlEFOKE Sl'GAIl CX)MIITI'EK TODAY Giieral 3lana)jer of Conx'ratlon said Conwdldation Was for Economy Mormon Loader As Trustee Holds 10,81" Slmres. Washington, June 23, Thomas Cutler before the Hardwlck commit tee today testified that It had been the Intention of the. late Henry Have meyer to make Joseph Smith, head of the Mormon church, president of the Utah, Idaho Sugar company. Cut ler is vice president ana general man ager of the corporation in which it is consolidated all the Mormon church interest amounting to $13 OOO.OiiO. Half the company's stock was taken by Havemeyer. Cutler said the con solidation was for economy and Smith as trustee holds 43.S15 shares. Thy company owns 30.000 acres of sugar beet land. Cutler said that Havemeyer f rst opposed the consolidation. He said ho did not know whether the church owum the Vnion Pacific stock, but un derstood that Smith was a director in tli' company. He explained that the company sold 13 pr cent of its out put in 1'iali and six per cent In Ida ho. MUST MAKE GOOD T On next Tuesday, June 27. com pany L, third Infantry, O. N. G., of this city, will bo out Tor quarterly In spection and within tho ranks of the company preparations are now being made for the event. According to Captain M. S. Kern, who is commanding officer of the company pending the election of a successor to Captain Ferguson, it is Important the company make a good showing. Should a bad report go to the adjutant general's office this time it will probably mean the mustering out of the company. Captain Kern Is also anxious to sec a permanent captain selected for the company so that he may be relieved of his pres ent responsibility. At the inspection Tuesday Captain Kern will present 12 members of the company with medals for proficiency on the rifle range. i ' . , , r - - ' ;l ! ' T ; "v- I f W 60VEM0R LEADS POSSE COIHIGr HALL Salnn. Jif.e ;y for a v.etk. was ittur'le The til tin wt;s cai'l';:-.! 1; ; Hal:, fie by the ,i '.it i niiTi.t ty J? ' ' ' ' J - " ?1 l f ' i ' ? ' -x. ' ' y k' A, ,- A ,i k V vft' i-.Vfcfc ' IJ i ' -PT '-?.; i V "V? i : :':t2.;?"''; ' :- - .is,-' & M ) Plodgett, 2" miles from Corvalli. 1L.11 v.-ris West f'T.t!'.l him. Tl-c :na:i hdl n i .-icpt bleeding from shot v.-ounds sustained who y. st. r !;:;-. Hill sail h wanted t'- ste his plalni-'ij h!s reason f .r escape. PI.AX TO 1U II.D I P WIH I'M.IX OM.KGI Walla Walla Wash., June 23. Se rious consideration was given yester day by the board of overseers to the pres"nt condition of Whitman college and the relation of the commun'ty to the institution. A committee com prising one member of the board for each district was appointed, with in structions to give careful considera tion to the matttr and call a meeting of th board not la'er than Septem ber 15, at wh'eh time it is expected recommendations relative to binding up the institution in Walla Walla n; moving to a mere congenial environ nient wi'l be made. No more posi tive statement could b" obtained from college authorities ton ght and the press was md represented at any of the four sessions the is of w h'eh closed today. ThcX committ'V ap pointed, (fllows: Bishop F. W. Keaior. of Tacuma, Judge Thomas Hurko or Si attic. W. B. Ayer cf p. inland, J. W. Lang.lon of Wa'ia W.dia. 1: 11 P. James of North Yakima J. P 11. Kjchanis c f Spokaiu' and .Indue F. S. Dietrich of Boise. Bank Probe lie Vaneouvtr. Wash, i Xpert a' eounlunt u f Vancouver tmlav a:; :!ns Monday. .1. W. Ferguson Portland, v;;s in d made arrangi - menls with Fred W. Tempi., county i.ttorniy, to begin experting the books of the Commercial Bank of Yancou i v Monday morning. ASK FOR LOCAL As an outcome of a meeting of the transportation committee of the com mercial club held last evening a re quest will be presented the O.-W. R. & X. company asking that a local train be placed lh running be tween this city and Huntington. The assistance of the other trtwns along the line will be solicited in the move. The subject of a better local train service from the eastward was brought before the committee by res idents of Meachnm who would like to have trains Nos. IT and IS stop at Meacham during the summer. in pursuance to the call of Chair man G. M. Rice a meeting of the transportation committee was called for last night and it was attended by the following members of the cqm mlttee. G. M. RIc Leon Cohen, Will Moore, W. A. Brown and Dr. I. PENDLETON TO HUNTINGTON i . i .f;- GET LARSE SUM SUiUEfiEfiELS " '9. AHD CAPTURES II BUDGET! VALLEY ;onv'. t horitl 's post's have hunted to the p nftcniiu! y t i.lay 1 -.1 by j .vernoi West, near sleeping under a tree when for sixty hours. H.j was l Sheriff Gellatly shot him mother ;.t Vald::ort in ex- a t s WILL' HELP BOY SCOIT IOYEMEXT Walla Wa'ia Wash.. June 23. Twenty-five business men and cler gymen gathered last night at the Y. M C. A. at a banquet and organized a local coun -il to supervise the boy scoot movement for Walla Walla and discussed plans for the rapid exten sion of the work, following out the loans said to have been found effec tive in Spokane. Within the last few weeks the num ber of scout has been 'nereased from 10 to 40 and this number is to be still further augmented by new re cruits until the local corps numbers 100 or more. Four scout masters have been appointed, each with the authority t i conduct a patrol of 25 scouts, and active work and fun is alna ly Iv.-ir.g planned for them. Fre o.unt "hikts," the study of woodcraft and plTinscraft and such beneficial uctUit'es as saving lives and provid ing onesself vlvn cast upoti his own ic'ourocs. i.v'll be ni it. An order I r.ivi u last night. taken up tills sum- j or la uii!'ovnis t Mhntc- ta's :a;i'ett Trip. Chicago, June 2". The Minnesota, i the I'fw s t . ! eess ii.:.m steamer of j th, CriU-ti-o & Duiuth Trat;sp rtat on j cim;einy. c nsb red the met up t date vessel on tin Great Lakes makes her maiden tr'p out i f Chicago today, j The Minnesota js ,',!' feet Imig and j V. Ill b aide to ncs.c.late seventeen i v::!i . :.n lmur. ! TRAIN H F. Temple. As explained to the eomm'tteo the train service from the east at this time Is such as to make it extremely inconvenient for parties desiring to come down from any of the mountain stations. There is no local now In the running and since Nos. 17 and IS do not step mountain people aro forced to rely upon catching train 5 into the city and 6 on returning. As both are night trains it provides a very inconvenient service. It was decided by the committee to request the railroad people to in stall a local train between here and Huntington for the summer months and to order trains 17 and IS to stop at Meacham until such a service may be established. A resolution to this effn t. has already been forwarded to the railroad officials. Yeggmen Dynamite Safe at Sterling City, Calif., and Make Clean Get- a-wa POSSKS SKAKCIIIXG IX MOUXTAIXS FOIl 31 EX I. (Kited Bank. Owned Principally by Gific!;:!s c.f Diamond Match Com pany Was Located In Heart of City Wliolo Inside of Bank Was recked. Chico, Calif., June 23. Posses to day are in tin; mountains near Ster l'ng City, thirty-five miles east of this city, pursuing the robbers who dynamited the Sterling City jank and fied with booty estimated to be near sixty thousand dollars. Take Every Cent. The yeggmen took every cent in the bank, which was owned principal ly by the officials of the Diamond Match company. The Institution was located in the heart of the town. The chances are good for the thieve?! to make a clean get away. Inside of Bank Wrecked. Information this afternoon from Sterling Ci'y says that the whole In side of the bank was wrecked. The two safes were rifled. The indica tions are that the yeggs backed the wagon to the front door of the build ng. hauled the loot to the railroad and there took a gravity car and slid down grade toward Chlco. Moody student Conference. Xorthlield, Mass., June 23. A national student conference for Christian workers was opened here today and will continue to July 2. It marks the twenty-fifth anniversary of the first summer' conference for students called by the late Dwight L. Moody. John R. Mott is the presid ing officer, and the speakers on the program include Bishop A. S. Lloyd, the Rev. Henry Sloan Coffin, Prof. Harlan P. Beach, the Rev. Harry Em erson Fosdick and many others. LUMBER SECRETARIES ARE INDICTED TODAY SPECIAL (iHAXD JURY FINDS II IXDICTMEXTS Men Arc Charged Whh Conspiracy mid Restraint of Trade A. L. Por ter of Spokane is Anion;- the Num ber. Chicago, June 23. The special I'nited States grand Jury today In dicted fourteen secretaries of the lum ber dealers' association In the west, and middle west, all of whom are members of the Lumber Securities bu reaus of Information on two counts, charging conspiracy and restraint of trade. It is intimated that members of the Weyi-rhauser family will be indicted later. The family controls immense timber tracts in the west. Among those indicted are ,. L,. por ti r. Spokane, of the western retail lu tube nn ens' a-'sociatloti. Centennial of Kettle Falls. Kettle Fa 'I--. Wash.. June Thv lioith annivevi'ry of the discovery of K 'l ie Falls is hehig celebrated here. David Thompson d'.seov. red the falls on June 21!. 111. Mr. Thompson was one of Kng'and's great gograph i r and explorers and named them after the Ind'r.n name ghen by the Flatheads. TIMELY SUBJECTS UP AT CLUB LUNCHEON At the monthly luncheon of the Commercial club this evening the program will consist of practical talks by prominent men upon subjects bearing directly upon the commer cial welfare of the city and of tho county. Among the subjects for dis cussion are good roads, the Straw berry Day at Weston, a new theater for Pendleton and other topics. A number of out of town people have accepted Invitations to the luncheon tonight and will be present. There is also a promise of a good lo cal attendance, despite the fact that tickets were not offered for sale un til today. The luncheon is to be served by the ladies of the M. E. church and will be given at the Eagles-Woodmen hall at 6:30. All members of the club and prospective members are In vited to attend. Mexican Government Plans to Stamp Out Revolt in Lowe Ca'ifomia TROOPS T 1 1 A X S ITI R R E I TO SOLTIIEKX PACIFIC Fifteen Hundred Federals Will Take 'I'm in at Juarez and Be Transport ed to San Diego Madero Troops Restore Order in .Mexico City. EI Pa:o., June 23. Under orders to absolutely stamn out all revolt In Lower California, General Escudero today is transferrins ir.00 federal troops to the Southern Pacific trains at Juarez for transport towards San Diego across the American territory. it is possible that some troops may reenter Mexico before the coast I reached, as Escudero is to have a right to change his plans so his move ments won't be known to the Magon- lsts. tearing that attempts to dy namite the train might be made. Col onel Steever, U. S. A., is sending a aeicciinient of American soldiers to guard each. train. Restore Order at Capital. Mexico City, June 23. The arrival of 500 of Madero's troops at Jalapa today restored order followlne Yes terday's outbreaks In which It is re- porw?u lo were killed and fifty three wounded. Four were killed and 22 wounded In a similar uprising last night at Mexicala. Maderista troops who gathered at Puebla with the in tention of disbanding todav refused to surrender their arms are camped outside the city vowing vengeance against the federals. Revolt 3Iay Do Over. San Diego. Cal., June 23. Together with General Mosby more than 90 of h's rebel soldiers are held at Fort Rosecranz awaiting extradition oa the charge of murder brought against them by the Mexican government. It Is believed that the revolt In Lower California is dead. For the first time since May, the Mexican flaf fl"es over Tia Juana, which is now occupied by the federal troops under Governor Vega. The number of dead is unascertained. Both sides claim that the other side lost from 30 to 50. riLL3IAX SOLYES WEED PROBLE3I Pullman, Wash., June 23. J. W. Campbell, a sheepman of Willow creek, spent last night In Pullman with 1100 sheep which he is taking to their summer pasture in the moun. tains near Troy, Idaho. He was giv en permission to camp in the c'ty park last night and the sheep did more toward cleaning the park of weeds, grass and other growths than the commercial club, Fortnightly club Women's Progressive club and citi zens have been able to do in several afternoons of united and hard work. Mr. Campbell declares that sheep nr the solution of the "Jim Hill" mustard problem. He says that the sheep love this weed and will eat It to the ground It put upon it when the weed is young and tender, but If turned into It when it is large, heavy and tough tln-y will eat the leave Si o.l pod--, biooin an I i verything but tlie bare, .tough stocks. He says that i.e w:.. civ -n the contra, t to clear a largo piece of the right of way of the i'.-W. it. N in western Whitman county, where a section foreman had worked for weeks with a large crew, and that in a week there was not a sto, h of "Jim Hill" mustard growing on the right of way. He-says that In places in western Whitman, Adams and Franklin counties this mustard is so high and thick that a dog can not get through it. but ;he sheep are cleaning it up root and branch. iTEWEI.FR RF1D 3IA RECOYER FROM INJURIES Los Angeles, June 23. But slight hope for the recovery of Jeweler Reid Is held out today. The skull is frac- I tured. After 24 hours'- search, the j police admit that they may never capiure me mier wno secured f-O.UOO worth of gems after beating Re'.d In the store. Academy of Medicine. I's Angeles. Cal.. June 23. Pre liminary to next week's great conven tion of the American Medical associ ation, the American Academy of Med icine opened its meeting here today with distinguished physicians from all over the land In attendance. No business was transacted today, the visitors spending the day in trips about the city and vicinity and la participating in the various entertain ments provided by the local medical society and business interests. I ivldctit at Cotton Show. Fall River. Mass.. June 21. Pres. ldent Taft arrived today and was greeted by Miss Marian P. Hill, queen of the Cotton Centennial Carnival, at tended by a number of the prettiest (girls of Fall River.